Tulsi Gabbard is the first ever Hindu lawmaker in the US Congress.
Tulsi Gabbard, the first ever Hindu lawmaker in the US Congress, would marry cinematographer Abraham Williams in April in a vedic ceremony, a media report has said. The marriage will take place in Hawaii.
The second term Democratic Congresswoman from Hawaii, Ms Gabbard, 33, had announced her engagement about a month ago.
She disclosed the identity of her fiancee in an interview to the local Honolulu Star Advertiser published this week. “Both Abraham and I are generally kind of private people. He has nothing to do with politics. He’s a humble, great guy who doesn’t want to be in the limelight, so this is something new to the both of us,” Ms Gabbard told the daily newspaper in an interview.
Mr Williams, 26, proposed Ms Gabbard with a 1.17-carat diamond ring when the Congresswoman was visiting Hawaii during Thanksgiving. This would be Ms Gabbard’s second marriage and the first one for Mr Williams.
Ms Gabbard said she would keep her last name after the marriage, which she wants to keep it a low key affair. Invitation for the wedding are expected to go out this week, which among others include US President Barack Obama.
Ms Williams is a freelance cinematographer who has made some short films and worked on commercial and political advertising campaigns, the daily reported.
While Ms Gabbard’s first marriage took place before a justice of the peace with only a few family members in attendance, the daily said this time she is planning a vedic wedding ceremony in keeping with the couple’s Hindu faith.
“For us it’s about having a shared sense of spiritual values and what we hold important. We try to live our lives in service to others and God in a way that has a positive impact on others around us. It was something I learned from a young age,” Ms Gabbard said.
The year 2013 will be remembered for the challenges it threw up for the ties between the world’s two largest democracies, including a row triggered by the arrest and strip-search of an Indian diplomat in […]
WASHINGTON (TIP): Mission Creep, a term that has come to describe a gradual shift in objectives during the course of a military campaign, often resulting in unplanned long-term commitment, came into the American lexicon during […]
TV interview comes days before first appearance at the UN General Assembly TEHRAN (TIP): Iran’s recently installed President has said his country won’t seek a nuclear bomb, and claimed – contrary to Western perception – […]
Be the first to comment